This illustration shows the entire telephone network, including a home connection, cell phone towers, long distance exchanges and transcontinental connections. Click here to see the animated version!
In this article, we will look at the telephone device that you have in your house as well as the telephone network it connects to so you can make and receive calls.
A Simple Telephone
Surprisingly, a telephone is one of the simplest devices you have in your house. It is so simple because the telephone connection to your house has not changed in nearly a century. If you have an antique phone from the 1920s, you could connect it to the wall jack in your house and it would work fine!
The very simplest working telephone would look like this inside:
In this article, we will look at the telephone device that you have in your house as well as the telephone network it connects to so you can make and receive calls.
A Simple Telephone
Surprisingly, a telephone is one of the simplest devices you have in your house. It is so simple because the telephone connection to your house has not changed in nearly a century. If you have an antique phone from the 1920s, you could connect it to the wall jack in your house and it would work fine!
The very simplest working telephone would look like this inside:
As you can see, it only contains three parts and they are all simple:
- A switch to connect and disconnect the phone from the network - This switch is generally called the hook switch. It connects when you lift the handset.
- A speaker - This is generally a little 50-cent, 8-ohm speaker of some sort.
- A microphone - In the past, telephone microphones have been as simple as carbon granules compressed between two thin metal plates. Sound waves from your voice compress and decompress the granules, changing the resistance of the granules and modulating the current flowing through the microphone.
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