| Numbers. | |
|---|---|
| 1 .—. | 6 ...... |
| 2 ..-.. | 7 —.. |
| 3 ...-. | 8 -.... |
| 4 ....- | 9 -..- |
| 5 —- | 0 ___ |
The various stops are also indicated in the same manner by combinations of dots and lines.
The Atlantic telegraph cables and similar enclosed wires between other countries are too well known to need detailed description. There is a great variety of telegraphic instruments. The dial, and other arrangements, are very common, and the Wheatstone Key instrument is supplied to private firms as being the most handy. It requires but a very short apprenticeship, and any person who is handy can easily learn to work it in a few minutes. The apparatus consists of a dial upon which the letters of the alphabet are printed, each letter being supplied with a key or stop. A pointer is placed in the centre, as in the wheel barometer, and there is a handle beneath. In front, upon a sloping board, is another dial plate and pointer; thus we have the receiver and transmitter before us in a very small space.
Fig. 254.—Receiver. Dial Telegraph. Fig. 255.—Manipulator.
When it is necessary to work the instrument a bell is rung by turning the handle rapidly. To speak by the instrument it is necessary to keep turning the handle with the right hand while the fingers of the left are employed in pressing down in as rapid succession as practice will permit the keys corresponding to the letters on the dial while the handle is kept turning. When a word is completed the operator must stop at the + at the top, and then begin again, stopping after each word. When all is said, a couple of rapid turns of the dial will signify that you have ended.
There are many other systems of telegraph, but all are dependent upon the same principles. The accompanying illustrations (figs. 254, 255) show a dial telegraph of a simple kind, which almost explains itself.
The first figure is the receiver, on which is a pointer fixed to a dial-plate having the letters of the alphabet inscribed around it. When the manipulator is being worked the dart points to the letters in succession of the words used, and they are separately spelt. The manipulator (fig. 255), by closing and opening the circuit, works the needle.
In the manipulator we have a wheel with an index point fixed above it. In this wheel are thirteen teeth, with the openings between them filled with ivory. The axis of the wheel is in contact with the wire from the positive pole, p, and a spring attached to the wire or by the binding-screw, t, presses against the circumference of the wheel, and completes the circuit. When the wheel is placed so that the arrow point is above the +, the needle of the receiver is also at +. By turning the wheel to bring the needle to A, the spring on the circumference is passed from an ivory “tooth” to a “metal” one; the circuit is closed, the point of the receiver also turns to A, and so on through the word by successive closing and breaking of the circuit.