File:EB1911 Telegraph - Muirhead's Siphon Recorder.jpg
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DescriptionEB1911 Telegraph - Muirhead's Siphon Recorder.jpg |
English: A siphon recorder, constructed by Dr Muirhead, and now in general use. The magnet between the poles of which the rectangular signal coil moves is built up of a number of thin flat horseshoe-shaped permanent magnets of a special quality of steel, and is provided with adjustable pole pieces. The signal coil is suspended by fibres and is mounted together with a fixed soft iron core on a brass plate affixed to a rack, with which a pinion operated by a milled head screw engages. To the brass plate is attached an arm carrying the bridge piece. A wire or fibre carrying the aluminium siphon cradle is stretched across this bridge piece, and on it is also mounted the small electromagnet, forming part of the “vibrator” arrangement with its hinged armature, to which one end of the stretched wire carrying the siphon is fastened. The ink-box is made adjustable, being carried by an arm attached to a pillar provided with a rack with which a pinion operated by a milled head screw engages. The motor is usually supported on a platform at the back of the instrument, its driving wheel being connected to the shaft of the paper roller by means of a spirally wound steel band. In what is known as the “hybrid” form of recorder the permanent magnets are provided with windings of insulated copper wire; the object of these windings is to provide a means of “refreshing” the magnets by means of a strong current temporarily sent through the coils when required, as it has been found that, owing to magnetic leakage and other causes, the magnets tend to lose their power, especially in hot climates. Instruments of the siphon recorder type have been made to work both with and without electrification of the ink. In the latter case, which is the standard practice, mechanical vibration of the siphon is substituted in the place of electrification of the ink, so as to eliminate the effect of atmospheric conditions which frequently caused discontinuity in the flow of ink. |
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Date | published 1911 | ||||
Source | Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), v. 26, 1911, “Telegraph,” p. 523, Fig. 32. | ||||
Author | Ware (artist); Muirhead (inventor) | ||||
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current | 19:11, 1 March 2016 | 1,237 × 892 (245 KB) | Library Guy (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description ={{en|1=A siphon recorder, constructed by Dr Muirhead, and now in general use. The magnet between the poles of which the rectangular signal coil moves is built up of a number of thin flat horseshoe-shaped permanent magnet... |
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