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Lumberwoods
U N N A T U R A L   H I S T O R Y   M U S E U M

“  S T E A M P U N K   P R O T O T Y P E S  
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Incredible Sound Machine
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THE PERRYSBURG JOURNAL — SEPTEMBER 21, 1900
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INCREDIBLE SOUND MACHINE.
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MONSTER PHONOGRAPHIt Shouts So Loudly That Every Word Can Be
Heard for a Distance of Ten Miles.
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    The latest monster phonograph is the one at Brighton, England, that shouts so loudly every word can be heard at a distance of ten miles away. You can whisper a sentence into the machine’s small, funnel-shaped mouth-piece and it will repeat it in tones that are more deafening than the shrieks of a liner’s steam siren. Yet every word is perfectly articulated, and a short-hand writer ten miles away can take down the message as easily as if you were dictating to him in a small room. The machine is the invention of Horace L. Short, of Brighton. In appearance it is merely an ordinary phonograph, with a large trumpet measuring four feet in length. Inside this trumpet there is a small and delicate piece of mechanism that looks something like a whistle. This is the tongue of the machine.
    Instead of the “records” being taken on wax in the usual manner, a sapphire needle is made to cut the dots representing the sound vibrations on a silver cylinder, and when the needle travels over the metal a second time the vibrations cause the whistle to produce a series of air waves, and the machine thus becomes a talking siren which transforms the human voice into a deafening roar.
    The experiments were made near the Devil’s Dyke. Brighton, where the inventor had his workshops. The instrument was placed on the roof of the laboratory, and was made to repeat a number of sentences. At a distance of ten miles the sounds were plainly heard by a large number X
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