SENDING MACHINES—ZINC ETCHING:
Before the refinement of light sensitive cells, actual electrical contact was oftenest employed in sending the impulses which represented light gradations in the picture.
Usually, therefore, a zinc etching of a pen and ink picture was made, and curved into a cylinder. This picture cylinder was then slipped onto a rotating mandril, which was also moved axially by a screw thread on the mandril shaft; or the cylinder rotated and a contact arm moved along by the screw, like the old wax cylinder phonograph.
A delicately suspended arm, moved along by the screw as just described and carrying, instead of the phonograph sound box, a very small and smooth point which was lifted by the high parts of the zinc etched picture. When so lifted the arm makes electrical contact with an adjustable point and current is put into the inter-station wire circuit.
By this means the values of the picture are converted into corresponding duration values of an electric current, and put onto a wire connecting the sending machine with a distant receiving machine (described in detail later in the text).
It will thus be seen that the electric impulses sent out over a wire attached to the contact point represent the value of the light and dark portions of the picture.
The electric impulses are similar to letter-code dots-and-dashes, for the picture actually opens and closes the circuit, like a telegraph key, the dark portions of the picture sending dashes and the light portions of the picture sending dots. With the point set at one end of the cylinder, and the contact arm advancing longitudinally by reason of the thread on the shaft, the point traverses a spiral around the cylinder until the whole picture is covered.