File:EB1911 Telegraph - Lord Kelvin's early Siphon Recorder.jpg
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DescriptionEB1911 Telegraph - Lord Kelvin's early Siphon Recorder.jpg |
English: The original form of the siphon recorder (telegraphy instrument), for which Lord Kelvin obtained his first patent in 1867. The indicator consists of a light rectangular signal-coil of fine wire, suspended between the poles of two powerful electromagnets M, M so as to be free to move about its longer axis, which is vertical, and so joined that the electric signal currents through the cable pass through it. A fine glass siphon tube is suspended with freedom to move in only one degree, and is connected with the signal-coil and moves with it. The short leg of the siphon tube dips into an insulated ink-bottle, so that the ink it contains becomes electrified, while the long leg has its open end at a very small distance from a brass table, placed with its surface parallel to the plane in which the mouth of the leg moves, and over which a slip of paper may be passed at a uniform rate, as in the spark recorder. The ink is electrified by a small induction electrical machine E placed on the top of the instrument; this causes it to fall in very minute drops from the open end of the siphon tube upon the brass table or the paper slip passing over it. When therefore the signal-coil moves in obedience to the electric signal-currents passed through it, the motion communicated to the siphon is recorded on the moving slip of paper by a wavy line of ink-marks very close together. The interpretation of the signals is according to the Morse code,—the dot and dash being represented by reflexions of the line of dots to one side or other of the centre line of the paper. |
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Date | published 1911 | ||||
Source | Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), v. 26, 1911, “Telegraph,” p. 523, Fig. 31. | ||||
Author | Harry Robert Kempe (section author, but probably not the artist) | ||||
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current | 19:04, 1 March 2016 | 553 × 680 (122 KB) | Library Guy (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description ={{en|1=The original form of the siphon recorder (telegraphy instrument), for which Lord Kelvin obtained his first patent in 1867. The indicator consists of a light rectangular signal-coil of fine wire, suspended between... |
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