РефератыИностранный языкThThe Telephone Essay Research Paper The TelephoneAbout

The Telephone Essay Research Paper The TelephoneAbout

The Telephone Essay, Research Paper


The Telephone


About 100 years ago, Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone by


accident with his assistant Mr. Watson. Over many years, the modern version of


the telephone makes the one that Bell invented look like a piece of junk.


Developments in tone dialing, call tracing, music on hold, and electronic


ringers have greatly changed the telephone.


This marvelous invention allows us to communicate with the entire globe


24 hours a day just by punching in a simple telephone number. It is the most


used piece of electronic apparatus in the world. It is probably one of the most


easy to use electronics available too. All you have to do is pick up the


receiver, listen for the tone, and then select a number using either tone or


pulsing dial.


A telephone can be separated into two main categories: there is the tone


(touch tone) or the older rotary dial (pulse) telephones. Then you can divide


those into other categories such as business line (multi — line) or home line


(single line). You can also have many other types of phones: there are those


that hang on the wall, on the desk, etc.


THE HANDSET


No matter what kind of telephone you own, there has to be some device


that allows you to talk to and listen to. This device is called the handset. The


handset is usually made out of plastic and inside it are two main components:


the transmitter and the receiver.


THE TRANSMITTER


It is the job of the transmitter to turn the air pressure created by


your sound waves to electrical signals so they can be sent to the other


telephone. The waves hit a thin skin called the diaphragm that is physically


connected to a reservoir of carbon granules. When the pressure hits the


diaphragm, it shakes up the carbon granules. Then the carbon expands and


contracts, depending on what force is exerted. At two points on the outer shell


of the reservoir of the carbon are two outlets of electricity from the talk


battery. By applying voltage, a current is made and is passed along the lines to


the waiting telephone. At the other end the current is transformed back to


speech.


THE RECEIVER


The receiver turns an ever varying current back to speech. A permanently


magnetized soft iron core is covered in many turns of very fine wire. Through


the wire, the electrical current is applied. The currents attract and repel an


iron diaphragm. By the vibrating actions the diaphragm does, a different


pressure is created and these pressures are translated by ear into intelligible


speech.


TELEPHONE NETWORKS


If you have ever opened up a phone (do not try this at home, you might


screw it up) you will probably see a PC (printed circuit) board. The board


contains the needed electronics for the phone to work properly. In older models


of a working telephone, this board may look like an electronic box. This board


is called the telephone network.


The telephone network’s function is to provide all the necessary


components and termination points (screw on or push on terminals). The


components and the termination points connect and match the impedance of a


handset (transmitter and receiver) to a two — wire telephone circuit.


Every component in the telephone has to be connected to the PC board.


Usually, the board is the most reliable component inside the phone. All the


delicate components are securely sealed by a metal enclosure. The PC board is a


very fragile object and can be broken easily. If you look closely, you can see


wires poking out of the board. The wires are soldered to the terminal legs. If


you break one of those wires, man are you dead!


TELEPHONE HOOK SWITCH


Every time you talk over a line, you always need to disconnect. The most


simple thing to do is to let the handset sit down. While sitting down, the


handset can give force to a spring loaded operating arm, which is connected to a


number of switch contacts. When this happens, the phone disconnects.


THE PHONE RINGER


Once a call has been dialed through, the telephone of the person being


called must be given some kind of signal to let him/her know that he/she has


been called. This is when the telephone rings. This type of signal is generated


using an alternating current somewhere between 90 to 220 V with a frequen

cy of


30 Hz.


But what if you have 5 or 6 phones connected on a party line? How can


you signal one telephone to ring? The answer is by frequency selection. Older


telephones had a different capacitor and ringer coil impedance values. It was


these small differences that made the bell select one frequency.


For example, if you have 5 telephones on one party line. If a call came


through for line 1, the central board would send 10 Hz (this is a guess) signal


to the party line. Line 1 would ring and all the others would remain quiet. If


the call was for line 5, the central board would send a 50 Hz (this is also a


guess) signal so that only line 5 would ring.


The phone rings by applying voltage where needed, a resonant circuit is


made. The xx Hz signal would make a magnetic field around a device called the


hammer. The hammer is attracted and then repelled by the constant changing of


the magnetic field. If two gongs were placed on either side of the hammer, the


hammer would strike each gong successively.


Other phones can use a one gong system. This system is like the two gong


system, but more compact. Due to the compact in size, this ringer is perfect for


small wall phones or such.


THE ROTARY DIAL (PULSE)


A rotary dial creates equally spaced make — and — break pulses


according to how far the plastic dialing plate goes. A good description of a


dialing plate is like this: it has regularly spaced holes to dial with and a


metal object called the finger stop. That makes the number you want to go to as


easy as 1-2-3. Each hole in the wheel represents one number 1 through to 10.


By using some small gears and a device that times the velocity of the


return of the finger wheel after you have dialed, the internal switches are


opened and closed at a rate of 1 pulse per second. The number of pulses created


is determined by how far the finger wheel has gone around before being stopped


by the finger stop. Let’s say that you dial the number 5, that means the


internal switches open and close 5 times before the finger stop stops it.


During the dial, a second set of switches remain closed and stay that


way for the entire time that you are dialing. The purpose for this second set of


switches is to keep the telephone receiver short for the whole dialing period.


If this switch was not there, you would hear loud and frustrating clicks in the


receiver.


TONE DIALING


There is also an alternative to the pulse dial, that is the tone dial.


Phones that use tone dialing are made with a piece of machinery that makes tones


on the phone line. These tones are transformed by the central board into numbers.


The act of putting an audio signal on the telephone line as a dialing


utility is called the DTMF (dual tone multi — frequency) dialing. It is called


this because the tone dial makes a combination of two tones. These audio signals


are made by a mixture of both high and low frequencies. When a button on the


dial pad is pushed, vertical and horizontal tones are combined to make a signal.


It is this newly made tone that is sent down the central board and then


transformed back to the number.


TELEPHONE CORDS


Older telephone lines were made of fork shaped piece of metal attached


to wires with a tool called the crimper. When installed, these wires were


screwed into the terminal box on the wall. This is really a pain in the rear end


because if you are going to fix the phone, you have to unscrew the box, then all


the screws. This process could last for hours at a time.


To make this job a lot easier, coiled cords and modular lines were


invented. To take out the handset or telephone, all you have to do is to unplug


the modular connector from its match and that is it. Modular cords can be bought


nearly in any electronics store.


There are three kinds of cords. One is the full modular cord. There are


small modular clips on both ends of the cord. The second is the one mentioned in


the first paragraph, this is called the spade — lug cord. The third one is


called the 1/4 modular, this cord has one modular connector on one side and the


old fashioned spade — lug end on the other. These 1/4 cords are not very common.


BIBLIOGRAPHY


BOOK: THE TALKING TELEPHONE AUTHOR: STEVE SOKOLOWSKI PUBLISHER: TAB BOOKS NOV.


1991


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