Abstract
WITH reference to the letter of Lieut. Savage which appeared in your last impression (p. 77) respecting the telephone, this gentleman has noticed that on removing the ferrotype disc of the sending instrument and tapping the magnet with a diamagnetic body, such as a piece of copper, the taps are distinctly heard at the receiving end. I have repeated this experiment. Not only can a diamagnetic substance be used for tapping, but the magnet may be removed altogether and a bar of soft iron substituted without causing any material difference in the results, and this bar of soft iron may be placed at rightangles to the line of dip. The vibrations of a tuning-fork are transmitted very distinctly. When held in the line of dip the results obained are more marked. Taps and the tuning-fork vibrations are readily heard, and by covering with the ferrotype disc a conversation was actually carried on through this bar of soft iron. There is perhaps nothing very surprising in obtaining these phenomena with the bar in the “dip” line, but when the same bar of perfectly soft and recently annealed iron can be held in any position in a plane at right-angles to that line and used as a sender for powerful vibrations, such as those of a tuning-fork or the taps of a diamagnetic body on the naked end of the bar, we cannot but be struck by the surprising delicacy of the telephone as a test for the earth's magnetism.
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CHIDDEY, A. The Telephone. Nature 18, 94 (1878). https://doi.org/10.1038/018094a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/018094a0
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