登陆注册
19985500000025

第25章

The transformation of this rudimentary means of communication into the beautiful mechanism which we have today forms a splendid chapter in the history of American invention.Of all the details in Bell's apparatus the receiver is almost the only one that remains now what it was forty years ago.The story of the transmitter in itself would fill a volume.Edison's success in devising a transmitter which permitted talk in ordinary conversational tones--an invention that became the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, which early embarked in the telephone business--at one time seemed likely to force the Bell Company out of business.But Emile Berliner and Francis Blake finally came to the rescue with an excellent instrument, and the suggestion of an English clergyman, the Reverend Henry Hummings, that carbon granules be used on the diaphragm, made possible the present perfect instrument.The magneto call bell--still used in certain backward districts--for many years gave fair results for calling purposes, but the automatic switch, which enables us to get central by merely picking up the receiver, has made possible our great urban service.It was several years before the telephone makers developed so essential a thing as a satisfactory wire.Silver, which gave excellent results, was obviously too costly, and copper, the other metal which had many desirable qualities, was too soft.Thomas B.Doolittle solved this problem by inventing a hard-drawn copper wire.A young man of twenty-two, John J.Carty, suggested a simple device for exorcising the hundreds of "mysterious noises" that had made the use of the telephone so agonizing.It was caused, Carty pointed out, by the circumstance that the telephone, like the telegraph, used a ground circuit for the return wire; the resultant scrapings and moanings and howlings were merely the multitudinous voices of mother earth herself.Mr.Carty began installing the metallic circuit in his lines that is, he used wire, instead of the ground, to complete the circuit.As a result of this improvement the telephone was immediately cleared of these annoying interruptions.Mr.Carty, who is now Chief Engineer of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the man who has superintended all its extensions in recent years, is one of the three or four men who have done most to create the present system.Another is Charles E.Scribner, who, by his invention of that intricate device, the multiple switchboard, has converted the telephone exchange into a smoothly working, orderly place.

Scribner's multiple switchboard dates from about 1890.It was Mr.

Scribner also who replaced the individual system of dry cells with one common battery located at the central exchange, an improvement which saved the Company 4,000,000 dry cells a year.

Then Barrett discovered a method of twisting fifty pairs of wires--since grown to 2400 pairs-into a cable, wrapping them in paper and molding them in lead, and the wires were now taken from poles and placed in conduits underground.

But perhaps the most romantic figure in telephone history, next to Bell, is that of a humble Servian immigrant who came to this country as a boy and obtained his first employment as a rubber in a Turkish bath.Michael I.Pupin was graduated from Columbia, studied afterward in Germany, and became absorbed in the new subject of electromechanics.In particular he became interested in a telephone problem that had bothered the greatest experts for years.One thing that had prevented the great extension of the telephone, especially for long distance work, was the size of the wire.Long distance lines up to 1900 demanded wire about one-eighth of an inch thick--as thick as a fairsized lead pencil;and, for this reason, the New York-Chicago line, built in 1893, consumed 870,000 pounds of copper wire of this size.Naturally the enormous expense stood in the way of any extended development.The same thickness also interfered with cable extension.Only about a hundred wires could be squeezed into one cable, against the eighteen hundred now compressed in the same area.Because of these shortcomings, telephone progress, about 1900, was marking time, awaiting the arrival of a thin wire that would do the work of a thick one.The importance of the problem is shown by the fact that one-fourth of all the capital invested in the telephone has been spent in copper.Professor Pupin, who had been a member of the faculty of Columbia University since 1888, solved this problem in his quiet laboratory and, by doing so, won the greatest prize in modern telephone art.His researches resulted in the famous "Pupin coil" by the expedient now known as "loading." When the scientists attempt to explain this invention, they have to use all kinds of mathematical formulas and curves and, in fact, they usually get to quarreling among themselves over the points involved.What Professor Pupin has apparently done is to free the wire from those miscellaneous disturbances known as "induction." This Pupin invention involved another improvement unsuspected by the inventor, which shows us the telephone in all its mystery and beauty and even its sublimity.Soon after the Pupin coil was introduced, it was discovered that, by crossing the wires of two circuits at regular intervals, another unexplainable circuit was induced.Because this third circuit travels apparently without wires, in some manner which the scientists have not yet discovered, it is appropriately known as the phantom circuit.The practical result is that it is now possible to send three telephone messages and eight telegraph messages over two pairs of wires--all at the same time.Professor Pupin's invention has resulted in economies that amount to millions of dollars, and has made possible long distance lines to practically every part of the United States.

同类推荐
  • The Bucolics Ecloges

    The Bucolics Ecloges

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宿吉祥寺寄庐山隐者

    宿吉祥寺寄庐山隐者

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 般舟三昧经

    般舟三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 子雍如禅师语录

    子雍如禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 难经古义

    难经古义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 驿路梨花

    驿路梨花

    一场车祸,王子成了植物人,五年以后,突然醒来,惊鸿一瞥,梨涡浅笑!天啊,梨涡浅笑的小可爱,竟然是他的儿子!话说他还是个钻石王老五呢,什么怪?西子湖畔,朵朵琼花盛开,他遇见了她,戴着大眼镜,平凡的打工女孩,可是,大眼镜的背后,却藏着倾城,秋水盈盈波动,梨涡浅浅笑!什么鬼?他在迷雾里徘徊,不可救药的爱上了她,她却--------在水一方,可遇而不可求。十八年后,拉斯维加斯夜店,一个年轻的女郎,秋水醉人的波动,梨涡动人的绽开,多少男人为之神魂,为之颠倒!天啊,他竟然是一个男孩,一个梨涡浅笑的男孩!男孩的眼底含着迷茫,含着忧伤,他是谁?他从哪里来?他好想知道,记忆里只有一场火,一场毁灭性的大火……
  • 卡尔加里的春天

    卡尔加里的春天

    这是一部情感小说。主要内容是叶晓蘅,一个有着流浪情结的女孩,为了追求不一样的生活体验,她不顾亲人的反对,执意移民来到了加拿大的卡尔加里,但她的丈夫阿海却始终理解不了,他力图劝说叶晓蘅放弃这一在他看来近似疯狂的举动,但未能奏效,他毅然选择了回国,把叶晓蘅一个人留在了遥远的异国他乡。
  • 唯卿不负

    唯卿不负

    爱情是什么?这是困扰陈影的一个问题,曾经她因为一段情伤远走他乡六年爱情是陈影。这似乎是顾离这六年来一直都认定的事实他们曾经缺少了一个开始的时机,当命运让他们再次相遇,顾离又是否还是能坚守他认定的爱情呢?陈影是否能够等来她的命中注定呢?尽请期待
  • 尚书博文精粹

    尚书博文精粹

    百篇博文记录一个铁骨柔情的中年男人的五味生活,他是丈夫,他是父亲,他是悉心记录生活的书写者。有琐碎,更有精彩,每一篇都透着醇厚的日常情味,本色笔墨书写本色人生。
  • 美人尸妆

    美人尸妆

    我经常做带颜色的梦。外婆是村里帮人走阴的神婆子,她说我这样是因为上辈子罪孽深重,这辈子又八字过阴,所以能看到常人看不到的东西。依她所言,我梦中的男女都不是人?QQ群:343316605(三生怀渊)
  • 逆命之子

    逆命之子

    命运:命是弱者的借口,运是强者的谦虚,我写这本小说的目的就是想让那些天天无所事事,碌碌无为,反而天天将“这就是命”“哎,认命吧”这些词挂在嘴边的人,在我的认识中,命是自己的,运也是自己的,命运就该掌握在自己的手中,认命就是你对你自己的否定,认命就是对自己的不努力,对自己的不作为找借口,好让自己就这样碌碌无为,无所事事下去。看主角怎么对抗早已注定的命运,一步步去改变命运,一步步走向巅峰!
  • 绝色总裁的小农民

    绝色总裁的小农民

    山村少年意外获得神魂传承,他只想安心种地,没想到人生发生了翻天覆地的变化,校花、警花、姐妹花蜂拥而至……耕田种地我在行,可是对付这么多莺莺燕燕,该怎么办才好?啊啊啊,美女们,请自重,俺还是一个黄花大小伙!
  • 下套儿

    下套儿

    本书是国内首部横跨两大行业并均做深度揭示的商战作品,是一本以现实场景和真实案例作为蓝本,以作者亲历作为基点的小说,把太阳能热水器和化妆品这两个行业各自领域内的战略、营销、策划、公关等针锋相对、生死博弈描写得淋漓尽致。
  • 极品怪咖在都市

    极品怪咖在都市

    闯黑道,当教头。校花,警花,各种花,统统都有。有杀手,我出头,杀手见我掉头就走。古杨闯都市,你我一同期待。
  • 武罗天下

    武罗天下

    天武历八千年,这,是一个风起云涌的大陆,一个英雄辈出的年代,八大门派的纷争,九流十道的恩怨,万年不现的圣者,破碎虚空的奥秘,太古被封禁的强者,励志登顶天下的萧峰,命运该何去何从?“以吾之刀,尽斩吾之仇敌,以吾之手,掌控万千星辰,以吾之眼,观遍世间万物,以吾之力,破碎虚空万物!”—萧峰于天武历八千三百年刻于天下无双城,万里青云峰之上书友群:125313474