THE TELAUTOGRAPH.
So far we have described several methods
of electrical communication at a distance, including
the reading of letters and symbols at sight (as by
the dial-telegraph and the Morse code embossed on a
strip of paper); printed messages and messages received
by means of arbitrary sounds, and culminating in the
most wonderful of all, the electrical transmission
of articulate speech.
None of these systems, however, are
able to transmit a message that completely identifies
the sender without confirmation in the form of an
autograph letter by mail.
In 1893 there was exhibited in the
electrical building at the World’s Fair an instrument
invented by the writer called the Telautograph.
As the word implies, it is a system by which a man’s
own handwriting may be transmitted to a distance through
a wire and reproduced in facsimile at the receiving-end.
This instrument has been so often described in the
public prints that we will not attempt to do it here,
for the reason that it would be impossible without
elaborate drawings and specifications. It is
unnecessary to state that it differs in a fundamental
way from other facsimile systems of telegraphy.
Suffice it to say that as one writes his message in
one city another pen in another city follows the transmitting-pen
with perfect synchronism; it is as though a man were
writing with a pen with two points widely separated,
both moving at the same time and both making exactly
the same motions. By this system a man may transact
business with the same accuracy as by the United States
mail, and with the same celerity as by the electric
telegraph.
A broker may buy or sell with his
own signature attached to the order, and do it as
quickly as he could by any other method of telegraphing,
and with absolute accuracy, secrecy and perfect identification.
In 1893, when this apparatus was first
publicly exhibited, it operated by means of four wires
between stations, and while the work it did was faultless,
the use of four wires made it too expensive and too
cumbersome for commercial purposes; so during all the
years since then the endeavor has been to reduce the
number of wires to two, when it would stand on an
equality with the telephone in this respect. It
is only lately that this improvement has been satisfactorily
accomplished, and, for reasons above stated, no serious
attempt has been made to introduce it as yet; but
it has been used for a long enough time to demonstrate
its practicability and commercial value. Companies
have been organized both in Europe and America for
the purpose of putting the telautograph into commercial
use.
By means of a switch located in each
subscriber’s office the wires may be switched
from a telephone to a telautograph, or vice versa,
in a moment of time. By this arrangement a man
may do all the preliminary work of a business transaction
through the telephone, and when he is ready to put
it into black and white switch in the telautograph
and write it down. For ordinary exchange work
this is undoubtedly the true way to use the telautograph,
because one system of wires and one central-station
system will answer for both modes of communication,
and in this way an enormous saving can be made to
the public. There is no question in the mind
of any one who is familiar with the operation of both
the telephone and telautograph but that some day they
will both be used, either in the same or separate
systems, as they each have distinctly separate fields
of usefulness, the telephone for desultory
conversation, the telautograph for accurate business
transactions. The question may arise in the minds
of experts how the two systems can be worked in the
same set of cables, and this leads us to discuss the
phenomena of induction.
Every one who has listened at a telephone
has heard a jumble of noises more or less pronounced,
which is the effect of the working of other wires
in proximity to those of the telephone. If, when
a Morse telegraph instrument is in operation on one
of a number of wires strung on the same poles, we
should insert a telephone in any one of the wires that
were strung on the same poles or on another set of
poles even across the street, we could hear the working
of this Morse wire in the telephone, more or less
pronounced, according to the distance the wire is from
the Morse circuit. This phenomenon is the result
of induction, caused by magnetic ether-waves that
are set up whenever a circuit is broken and closed,
as explained in Chapter VI.
The telephone is perhaps the most
sensitive of all instruments, and will detect electrical
disturbances that are too feeble to be felt on almost
any other instrument, hence the telephone is preyed
upon by every other system of electrical transmission,
and for this reason has to adopt means of self-protection.
It has been found that the surest way to prevent interference
in the telephone from neighboring wires is to use
what is called a metallic circuit that is
to say, instead of running a single wire from point
to point and grounding at each end, as in ordinary
telegraph systems, the telephone circuit is completed
by using a second wire instead of the earth.
As a complete defense against the
effects of induced currents the wires should be exactly
alike as to cross-section (or size) and resistance.
They should be insulated and laid together with a slight
twist. This latter is to cause the two wires
so twisted to average always the same distance from
any contiguous wire.
One factor in determining the intensity
of an induced current is the distance the wire in
which it flows is from the source of induction.
A telephone put in circuit at the end of the two wires
that are thus laid together will be practically free
from the effects of induced currents that are set
up by the working of contiguous wires for
this reason: Whenever a current is induced in
one of the slack-twisted wires it is induced in both
alike; the two impulses being of the same polarity
meet in the telephone, where they kill each other.
In order to have a perfect result we must have perfect
conditions, which are never attained absolutely, but
nearly enough for all practical purposes.
In the early days of telephony great
difficulty was experienced in using a single wire
grounded at each end in the ordinary way, if it ran
near other wires that were in active use. As
time passed on and the electric light and electric
railroad came into operation these difficulties were
immensely increased, till now in large cities the telephone
companies are fast being driven to the double-wire
system, which will soon become universal for telephonic
purposes the world over, except perhaps in a few country
places where there is freedom from other systems of
electrical transmission. To successfully work
the telephone and telautograph through the same cables,
these protective devices against induction must be
very carefully provided and maintained.