Methods of High Quality Recording and Reproducing of Music and Speech Based on Telephone Research

01 July 1926

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This paper deals with an analysis of the general requirements of recording and reproducing sound without appreciable distortion. The storing or recording of sound requires, first, a mechanical system which will respond faithfully to the sound waves which are to be recorded. Then there is required some material in or on which this sound may be recorded and an intervening system which permits the sound waves to make the record in this material. In the usual case, and in that which is particularly discussed, there is a mechanical system which will vibrate in response to the sound which is to be recorded and directly through some mechanical linkage, or less directly through an electrical linkage, drives a cutting mechanism which will impress a wax record. The amount of power available to operate the recorder directly from the sound in the recording room is so small as to make the use of high quality electrical apparatus with associated vacuum tube amplifiers of very distinct advantage over the acoustic method. Where the question of reproduction is concerned, the same two alternatives mentioned for recording present themselves, namely, direct use of power derived from the record itself vs. the use of electro-mechanical equipment with an amplifier. In this case, however, the situation is materially different since the power which can be drawn directly from the record is more than sufficient for many uses. It is, therefore, generally simpler to design one single mechanical transmission system than it is to add the unnecessary complications of amplifiers, power supply and associated circuits.