• Year
  • 1900 ??
  • Category
  • Morse-Equipment & TTY, RTTY, TDD etc.
  • Radiomuseum.org ID
  • 299042

 Technical Specifications

  • Wave bands
  • - without
  • Power type and voltage
  • Other, details in remarks or not known.
  • Loudspeaker
  • - - No sound reproduction output.
  • Material
  • Various materials
  • from Radiomuseum.org
  • Model: Syphon Recorder - Muirhead & Co. Ltd.; Beckenham
  • Shape
  • Tablemodel, Box - most often with Lid (NOT slant panel).
  • Notes
  • The syphon or siphon recorder is an electromechanical device used as a receiver for submarine telegraph cables invented by William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin in 1867. It automatically records an incoming telegraph message as a wiggling ink line on a roll of paper tape. Later a trained telegrapher would read the tape, translating the pulses representing the "dots" and "dashes" of the Morse code to characters of the text message.

    The syphon recorder replaced Thomson’s mirror galvanometer as the standard receiving instrument for submarine telegraph cables, allowing long cables to be worked using just a few volts at the sending end. The disadvantage of the mirror galvanometer was that it required two operators, one with a steady eye to read and call off the signal, the other to write down the characters received. Its use spread to ordinary telegraph lines and radiotelegraphy radio receivers. A major advantage of the syphon recorder was that no operator has to monitor the line constantly waiting for messages to come in. The paper tape preserved a record of the actual message before translation to text, so errors in translation could be checked.

  • Mentioned in
  • -- Original-techn. papers. (1903 Electrical Installations, vol. V, London: Caxton, pp. p. 49)
  • Author
  • Model page created by Alan Larsen. See "Data change" for further contributors.

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