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1. On the Splitting up of Electric Currents, as detected by the Telephone, and the founding thereon of a Sounder to call attention from one Telephone to another

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Extract

The telephone is of no use as a “far-speaker,” without some means of calling the attention of the attendant at the distant station. Nothing could well be better than the “electric-bell call,” and the sounder which I am about to describe makes no pretensions of competing with the bell, except on the points of simplicity, cheapness, and facility of use; and although its employment is limited to short length lines, it may be assumed that it is upon short length lines that the telephone will be most frequently used. I have had this sounder in experimental use for more than three months, and have shown it to many persons as a very obvious expedient. However, as it does not appear to have been referred in any publication, I venture to bring it as a Note before the Society; it is of too trifling a nature to be made the subject of a formal paper.

Type
Proceedings 1877-78
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1878

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