
3 5 c m
40cm
actual image size: 32cm x 27cm
Description
Sir Charles Wheatstone (1802-1875) believed a telegraph system should be simple to operate. In this telegraph receiver, which he patented in 1858, the user cranked a handle continuously while presing the letter buttons on a large dial. Each time a button was presed the ABC telegraph sent out electrical impulses, moving a pointer at the far end to the next letter of the mesage. A smaller dial was used for receiving mesages and, during transmision, to check the system was working correctly. Synchronisation was ensured by setting idle instruments to a standard position. This was the first apparatus to print a telegram in type, and could be operated to type at speeds of up to 15 words per minute.
Image Details
Image Ref.
10212441
© Science Museum / Science & Society Picture Library