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Wire recording



 
 
Wire recording is a type of analogue audio storage in which the recording is made onto thin steel or stainless steel wire
Wire

A wire is a single, usually cylinder , elongated string of metal. Wires are used to bear mechanical Structural loads and to carry electricity and telecommunications Wiktionary:signal....
.

first wire recorder was the Valdemar Poulsen
Valdemar Poulsen

Valdemar Poulsen was a Denmark engineer. He developed a Wire recording in 1899.The magnetic recording was demonstrated in principle as early as 1898 by Valdemar Poulsen in his Telegraphone....
 Telegraphone of the late 1890s, and wire recorders for law/office dictation and telephone recording were made almost continuously by various companies (mainly the American Telegraphone Company) through the 1920s and 1930s.






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Encyclopedia


Wire recording is a type of analogue audio storage in which the recording is made onto thin steel or stainless steel wire
Wire

A wire is a single, usually cylinder , elongated string of metal. Wires are used to bear mechanical Structural loads and to carry electricity and telecommunications Wiktionary:signal....
.

History

The first wire recorder was the Valdemar Poulsen
Valdemar Poulsen

Valdemar Poulsen was a Denmark engineer. He developed a Wire recording in 1899.The magnetic recording was demonstrated in principle as early as 1898 by Valdemar Poulsen in his Telegraphone....
 Telegraphone of the late 1890s, and wire recorders for law/office dictation and telephone recording were made almost continuously by various companies (mainly the American Telegraphone Company) through the 1920s and 1930s. They were most famously introduced as consumer technologies after World War II.

Wire recording's most widespread use was in the 1940s and early 1950s, following the development of inexpensive designs licensed internationally by the Brush Development Company of Cleveland, Ohio and the Armour Research Foundation of the Armour Institute of Technology (later Illinois Institute of Technology
Illinois Institute of Technology

Illinois Institute of Technology is a private Ph.D.-granting university located in Chicago, Illinois, area with programs in engineering, science, psychology, architecture, business, communication studies, industrial technology, information technology, design, and law....
). These two organizations licensed dozens of manufacturers in the U.S., Japan, and Europe.

Consumer wire recorders were marketed for home entertainment or as an inexpensive substitute for commercial office dictation recorders. However, the introduction of consumer magnetic tape recorders around 1948 quickly drove wire recorders from the market.

Magnetic format

Poulsen's original telegraph one and indeed all very early recorders placed the two poles of the record/replay head on opposite sides of the wire. The wire was thus magnetised transversely to the direction of travel. This method of magnetization was quickly found to have the limitation that as the wire twisted, there were times when the magnetization of the wire was at right angles to the position of the two poles of the head and the output from the head fell to almost zero.

The development was to place the two poles on the same side of the wire so that the wire was magnetised along its length or longitudinally. Additionally, the poles were shaped into a 'V' so that the head wrapped around the wire to some extent. This increased the magnetising effect and also increased the sensitivity of the head on replay because it 'collected' more of the magnetic flux from the wire. This system was not entirely immune to twisting but the effects were far less marked.

The longitudinal method survives into magnetic tape recording to this day.

Media capacity and speed

Compared to later tape recorders, wire recording devices had a high media speed, made necessary because of the use of the solid metal medium. The wire reels were recorded or listened at nominally 24 inches per second (610 mm/s), making a typical one-hour reel 7,200 feet (approx. 2195 m) long. This enormous length was possible on a spool of under 3 inches in diameter because the wire was nearly as fine as hair. Since the wire was pulled past the head by the take up spool, the wire speed increased as the diameter of the spool increased.

Wires also came in different lengths, such as 15 or 30 minutes. After recording or playback, the reel had to be rewound, because, unlike the later tape recorders, the take up reel on most wire recorders was not removable. In practice, the fine wire easily became tangled and snarls were extremely difficult to fix. Editing could be accomplished by cutting the wire and tying the ends together, with the knot sometimes welded with the tip of a lit cigarette. Although wire was difficult to edit, it provided tremendous advantages over trying to edit material recorded on transcription disks, which was usually accomplished with stopwatches, multiple turntables and a lot of patience. The first regularly scheduled network radio program produced and edited on wire was CBS' "Hear it Now" with Edward R Murrow. Recording wire would run through a slit on the record and playback head which on many machines moved up and down like a fishing reel to ensure the wire was placed on the take-up reel evenly (on high-end machines moving wire guides performed this function). Tied-knot edits would cause the wire to pop out of the slit in the head, but it would drop back into the slit after the edit passed. This brief dropout could make editing music problematic.

Fidelity

The audio fidelity
Fidelity

Fidelity is a notion that at its most abstract level implies a truthful connection to a source or sources. Its original meaning dealt with loyalty and attentiveness to one's duty to a lord or a monarch, in a broader sense than the related concept of fealty....
 of wire recording made on one of these post-1945 machines was comparable to a 78-rpm record or one of the early tape recorders. The Magnecord Corp. of Chicago briefly manufactured a high fidelity wire recorder intended for studio use, but soon abandoned the system to concentrate on tape recorders.

Some wire recorders were also used in aircraft cockpit voice recorder
Cockpit voice recorder

A Cockpit Voice Recorder , or "black box", is a flight recorder used to record the audio environment in the flightdeck of an aircraft for the purpose of investigation of accidents and incidents....
s and flight data recorder
Flight data recorder

The flight data recorder is a flight recorder used to record specific aircraft performance parameters. A companion device is the cockpit voice recorder , which records conversation in the cockpit, radio communications between the cockpit crew and others , as well as ambient sounds....
s beginning in the early 1940s, mainly for recording radio conversations between crewmen or with ground stations. In this capacity, being somewhat more resilient than magnetic tape, wire recorders survived somewhat later, being manufactured for this purpose through the 1950s and remaining in use somewhat later than that. There were also wire recorders made to record data in satellites and other unmanned spacecraft of the 1950s to perhaps the 1970s.

Notable uses

In 1944 at the Middle East Radio Station of Cairo, Egyptian composer Halim El-Dabh
Halim El-Dabh

Halim Abdul Messieh El-Dabh is an Egyptian-born U.S. composer, performer, Ethnomusicology, and educator....
 used wire recorders as a tool to compose music.

In 1946, Norman Corwin
Norman Corwin

Norman Lewis Corwin is an United States writer, screenwriter, producer, essayist and teacher of journalism and writing. His earliest and biggest success was in the writing and directing of radio drama during the 1930s and 1940s....
 and his technical assistant, Lee Bland, took a wire recorder on their One World Flight, a round-the-world trip subsidized by friends of Wendell Wilkie and patterned after Willke's own 1942 trip. Corwin documented the post-war world and used his recordings in a series of 13 broadcast documentaries on CBS -- which were also among the first broadcast uses of recorded sound allowed by the radio networks.

In 1949 at Fuld Hall in Rutgers University
Rutgers University

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey , is the largest institution for higher education in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was originally chartered as Queen's College in 1766 and is the Colonial colleges in the United States....
, Paul Braverman made a 75-minute recording of a Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie

Woodrow Wilson "Woody" Guthrie is best known as an United States singer-songwriter and folk musician, whose musical legacy includes hundreds of political, Traditional music and children's songs, ballads and improvised works....
 concert using a wire recorder. The recording only came to light in 2001, and appears to be the only surviving live recording of Woody Guthrie; it was restored over several years and released on CD in 2007. The CD was subsequently nominated for and won a 2008 Grammy award.

See also

  • Webster-Chicago
    Webster-Chicago

    For the contractor based in San Mateo, California, see Webcor BuildersThe Webster Chicago Corporation was a maker of electronic equipment in Chicago Illinois....
    , manufacturer of Webster-Chicago and WebCor wire-recorders
  • Sound recording
  • Tape recorder
    Tape recorder

    This article deals mainly with analog signal tape recorders for Sound recording and reproduction applications; information on Digital Audio Tape, recording of Videocassette recorder, and data logger can be found in other articles....


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